Purton Grabs Three Lead On Moreira

Teetan maintains his bright form

Zac Purton will start Sunday’s 11-race Sha Tin card with a precious three-win lead in the title race after snaring a treble on Wednesday at the same venue.

He made the ideal start to the exclusively all-weather track fixture as he sought to gain the upper hand on his jockeys’ championship rival Joao Moreira, who sat out the meeting due to suspension.

Purton returns in the opener on Coolceleb (Pic -HKJC)

The Australian was level with the Brazilian on 123 wins at the outset and got the early break he was looking for when Coolceleb rocketed from gate six in the opener, section three of the Class 4 Shearwater Handicap (1200m).

The Benno Yung-trained four-year-old enjoyed an uncontested lead and powered down the home straight for a three and three quarter-length success.

He won the feature on Kings Shield and the reigning champion made it treble with a well-judged, galvanising drive aboard Enfolding (120lb) to overhaul Touch Of Luck (121lb) in the final stride of the last race, the Class 3 Peacock Handicap.

The Yung stable bagged a double thanks to Striking Mr C (124lb) in section two of the Shearwater Handicap. Derek Leung was strong in the drive to ensure a short-head success over the Jack Wong-ridden Gunnar (128lb).

Tony Cruz has his eyes fixed on longtime trainers’ premiership leader Ricky Yiu following a treble that took him to 51 wins for the term, just six off the top spot.

“I think I’d better give it a go!” Cruz said with a chuckle.

The two-time champion had not had a single win on the dirt track this term but after Beauty Loyal broke that cold snap in section one of the Class 3 Flamingo Handicap (1200m), Party Everyday made it a quick-fire brace in the next, the Class 4 Spoonbill Handicap (1650m), and California Concord turned that into a hat-trick in section two of the Flamingo Handicap.

Karis Teetan was in the plate for all three strikes as he took his season’s tally to 72, with 19 of those having been achieved aboard Cruz-trained gallopers.

“It’s nice to get a treble for Tony and he hadn’t had a win on the dirt track this season, so it’s nice to break that for him. He and his owners have given me good support and I’m grateful for that,” Teetan said.

California Concord seals trebles for Karis Teetan and Tony Cruz (Pic – HKJC)

After Beauty Loyal’s neck score at 9/1, the Hong Kong International Sale graduate Party Everyday broke his maiden, at the 12th attempt, as the 3.6 second pick in the market.

“Last time he was pulling and hanging out – we know his problem and the race just needs to happen for him,” Teetan said. “Today, with the perfect draw (two), he just had that sit behind the cover and he switched off nicely. He waited a little and when he moved up he didn’t give up, it was a nice win. I just hope he gets rid of his bad habits and he’ll be okay.”

California Concord earned a first win at his second start in Hong Kong, having won two from nine in Australia.

“I trialled him when he was up in Conghua and he really gave me a good feel. It’s all about quality with him, he’s got some potential, he was professional out of the gate and he focused nicely but he’s a next season horse,” Teetan said.

Hidden Spirit, meanwhile, is surely the season’s Class 5 king. The Paul O’Sullivan-trained five-year-old nailed his fourth win in the grade this term – all on the dirt – and third on the bounce with Neil Callan in the plate. The Irishman urged the Kiwi import to run down Curling Luxury for a three quarter-length score in the Swan Handicap (1800m).

Vincent Ho registered his first win for the month at Happy Valley just last Wednesday and he doubled his May tally in section one of the Class 4 Shearwater Handicap (1200m). The Francis Lui-trained Thou Shall Sing (126lb) rattled home to edge Pearl Champion (129lb) by a neck.

Hong Kong racing continues at Sha Tin on Sunday, 31 May.

  • Hong Kong Jockey Club

Have Your Say - *Please Use Your Name & Surname

Comments Policy
The Sporting Post encourages readers to comment in the spirit of enlightening the topic being discussed, to add opinions or correct errors. All posts are accepted on the condition that the Sporting Post can at any time alter, correct or remove comments, either partially or entirely.

All posters are required to post under their actual name and surname – no anonymous posts or use of pseudonyms will be accepted. You can adjust your display name on your account page or to send corrections privately to the EditorThe Sporting Post will not publish comments submitted anonymously or under pseudonyms.

Please note that the views that are published are not necessarily those of the Sporting Post.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Share:

Facebook
WhatsApp
Twitter

Popular Posts